HomeNewsIndiaCivil defence mock drills today: When India 'hid' Taj Mahal amid Pakistani airstrikes in 1971

Civil defence mock drills today: When India 'hid' Taj Mahal amid Pakistani airstrikes in 1971

Camouflaging vital installations is one such exercise that stands out for its symbolic and strategic resonance. It's a scenario that harks back over five decades, to a moment when India faced the very real prospect of war and responded with quiet ingenuity: hiding the Taj Mahal.

May 07, 2025 / 09:22 IST
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Civil defence mock drills are being conducted across 244 districts today amid rising tensions with Pakistan in wake of the terror attack in Pahalgam terror attack and the retaliatory strikes by Indian armed forces on terror infrastructure in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK) and Pakistan. The measures to be taken during the mock drills include the operationalisation of air-raid warning sirens, training civilians on civil-defence aspects to protect themselves in the event of a "hostile attack" and cleaning bunkers and trenches. The other measures are provisions for crash-blackout measures, early camouflaging of vital plants and installations and updating and rehearsing evacuation plans.

Among these, camouflaging vital installations is one such exercise that stands out for its symbolic and strategic resonance. It's a scenario that harks back over five decades, to a moment when India faced the very real prospect of war and responded with quiet ingenuity: hiding the Taj Mahal.

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When war clouds gathered over Agra

In late 1971, as tensions escalated with West Pakistan (now Pakistan) over the humanitarian crisis and political turmoil in East Pakistan (now Bangladesh), India braced for full-scale war.